Cervical adhesions are a disease of the cervix in women. After getting sick, we must go to the hospital for reasonable examination and diagnosis in a timely manner, and also treat it according to our own condition.
Uterine adhesions can cause habitual miscarriage
We all know that the uterus is the palace where fetuses are born, and women with severe intrauterine adhesions often find it difficult to conceive. Women with mild adhesions may conceive smoothly, but adhesions can lead to a smaller uterine volume and miscarriage. The uterus increases with the development of the fetus, and when the adhesive uterine cavity increases to a certain extent, it cannot continue to grow and is prone to miscarriage.
Symptoms of cervical adhesions
Cervical adhesions are mainly manifested in clinical practice as menstrual abnormalities (reduced menstrual flow or even amenorrhea), premenstrual abdominal pain, severe and even secondary infertility, or recurrent miscarriage after pregnancy, ectopic pregnancy, placenta previa, placental transplantation, etc., causing significant damage to women
However, due to the diverse clinical manifestations of cervical adhesions, women of childbearing age with premature amenorrhea and infertility or recurrent miscarriage can be diagnosed immediately when seeking medical attention in the hospital. However, there are also patients with mild cervical adhesions, only with reduced menstrual flow or dysmenorrhea. Some patients receive symptomatic treatment and no longer seek the cause after symptoms improve. As a result, the endometrium adheres, fibrosis, or scarring due to leakage
Diagnosis of cervical adhesions by examination
At present, the most reliable diagnostic standard for cervical adhesions is hysteroscopy. Hysteroscopy is an endoscope used for intrauterine examination and treatment. It is a minimally invasive gynecological diagnostic technique that has an expanding effect, allowing doctors to more intuitively and accurately understand the pathological conditions in the uterine cavity during the diagnosis process, determine the location, scope, degree, etc. of adhesions.
Previously, hysterosalpingography or ultrasound were often used to diagnose cervical adhesions, but these methods were only qualitative. Nowadays, using hysteroscopy not only allows for direct examination of the site of adhesions, but also enables judgment of the type and degree of adhesions, providing a basis for evaluating the difficulty of surgery, postoperative medication, and prognosis. Hysteroscopy can perform precise adhesion separation treatment and tubal catheterization during examination, avoiding the drawbacks of blind separation, minimizing damage to the endometrium, maximizing protection of endometrial function, ensuring normal menstrual recovery, and improving fertility..